-
South Bend and St. Joseph County law enforcement officials spoke out Friday against a piece of legislation that would eliminate the need for a permit to carry a handgun in public.
-
Hoosiers will no longer have to get a permit to carry a handgun in public under a bill headed to the governor’s desk.
-
A Senate committee took eight hours of testimony on so-called “permitless carry” legislation, HB 1077, last week. And at the end of it, the committee voted to overhaul the bill, keeping the permit system in place.
-
A top Indiana legislator says a proposal to repeal the state’s handgun permit requirement might win approval despite ongoing opposition from major law enforcement organizations and the state police superintendent.
-
The Senate did not give the handgun license elimination bill a hearing before Thursday's deadline to do so.
-
Republicans easily pushed the proposal through the Indiana House, but Senate leaders have decided against taking up the bill in the final weeks of this year's legislative session.
-
Bill author Rep. Ben Smaltz (R-Auburn) said the license is nothing more than an unnecessary hurdle for people who are constitutionally allowed to carry a handgun.
-
Indiana law enforcement groups are on both sides of a debate over legislation that would no longer require Hoosiers to get a handgun license.
-
Sen. David Long stresses he's only speaking for himself - not the Senate Republican caucus.
-
Rep. Jim Lucas voted against the measure because he wants the bill's original language, which would have eliminated the need for handgun licenses entirely.